There are difficult choices for hundreds of Thai staff in Israel.
After learning that her brother, Somkhwan, who had gone to work on a fruit farm in Israel, was likely one of the staff killed in an attack carried out as the first round of Israel-Gaziland issue erupted on Saturday, Nupha Phansa, at 63, is still reeling from the incident.
At 4 a.m. on Sunday, her daughter, Somkhwan’s older girl, called Ms. Nupha to let her know that she had seen some photos of the victims’ body on social media, and one of them had resembled her.
When Ms. Nupha saw the image, she immediately recognized her father’s shirt and pants and realized that her worst fears had come true.
Following the startling news, a number of local authorities paid Ms. Nupha’s house in tambon Khamin in the Muang neighborhood of Kalasin to offer social support and talk about how to return Somkhwan to Thailand for the death.
My son, who frequently called me from Israel, just informed me that the situation that was unusual before the poor news arrived. She continued,” I therefore told him to return back.” ” I wanted him to return back safely, not his income.”
His mother afterwards discovered that her son had become sick and intended to discuss a return home with his Jewish employer after that conversation. He was never going to include that talk.
Previous man Somkhwan, who got married and moved to Nakhon Phanom, left Thailand on November 9 of last year for a five-year job commitment in Israel.
According to his mother, he borrowed 120, 000 ringgit to cover the cost of his trip to Israel, where his monthly salary was 80,000 bht.
121 of the 230 staff from the state who went to work in Israel, according to Suphachai Waengkham, a top established at Kalasin’s Office of Employment, lived and worked in the region close to the crime.
Sombat Traisak, the sheriff provincial governor of Chaiyaphum, announced on Monday that 772 workers from this territory have entered Israel to work legally while authorities continue to look for another group who did so in violation of the law.
Sairung Miwut had the good fortune to restore contact with her father, Worachet, in the Phu Khieo city of Chaiyaphum.
Mr. Sairung expressed her desire for Worachet to return home right away in a video call with him, despite the fact that he wanted to see how the condition develops first.
” Let me remain here for a little while longer.” We all need more money to send up back, so many others are good to do the same. I’m unsure of my exact departure date from Israel. During the film call, Mr. Worachet was overheard saying to his family,” I will have to wait and see.”
The family of Phatthayut Tonsoki, 40, and a 58-year-old villager in Nakhon Phanom’s Phon Sawan region has been unable to contact her child since the problems began.
Natthawut Nakmao, a 30-year-old Thai worker in Israel and local of Nakhon Ratchasima, was interviewed by The Bangkok Post on Monday via video website.
He claimed that because he resided in a region far from the murder, his safety and continued employment were secure. He did, however, express great concern for the security of a fellow employee in the war zone from the same community in Nakhon Ratchasima.
Since the invasion began, Mr. Natthawut claimed he hasn’t been able to get in touch with his friend Phongsathon.
However, according to acting Nakhon Ratchasima government Atsuek Chanahan, a man by the name of Phongsathon was one of the 11 Siamese workers taken hostage during the attacks on Saturday.
There is only one Phongsathon who is truly from Nakhon Ratchasima, according to a review of the official records of Thai workers in Israel, he claimed.
According to Mr. Atsuek, the employer, whose last name is Khunsi, is 25 years old and had resided and worked in southwestern Israel for more than a year prior to the attack on Saturday.
The Phongsathon’s community in Nakhon Ratchasima is currently crossing their fingers and fervently hoping that their family is not the one being held prisoner.
According to Mr. Atsuek, 2,163 employees from Nakhon Ratchasima began working in agriculture in Israel.